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Cassette (WIP UNFINISHED)

Cassette is a new programming based off of the languages metatape, elixir, and joy, evolving syntax and semantics from each. Cassette is

  • Untyped
  • Interpreted (for now)
  • Homoiconic
  • Functional
  • Concatenive
  • Tape Based
  • Metaprogrammable (in the future).

how does it work?

If you are familier with stack langs, such as Forth, Joy, or Factor, it is common knowledge that the whole program is a stack. In Cassette it's very similar, but instead it uses a tape, which is a Circular Doubly Linked List. Internally, Cassette represents it with two stacks (look into tape.pl for more details).

This means that we can shift a tape left or right. Take for instance this tape:

1 2 3 4 5

If we shift the tape left, we get this new tape.

2 3 4 5 1

Similarly, we can move it right.

5 1 2 3 4

In Cassette you have this functionality for the whole program, quotes, and first class tapes.

Even though its a tape language, it works very much like a stack lang, using the left list as the main stack. All the pushing and popping happens there.

examples

reversing a tape:

fn [] reverse -> [] 
fn [x <: xs] reverse -> [xs reverse :> x] % examples of cons and snoc for pattern matching

fn main ::
    [1, 2, 3] reverse out
end

common stack functions:

fn x dup :: x x end
fn x y swap :: y x end
fn x y pop -> x

21 dup
5 6 swap
7 8 9 pop

or as quotes

(as x -> x x) as dup ->
(as x y -> y x) as swap ->
(as x y -> x) as pop ->

21 dup ~> % ~> evaluates a quote on the tape
5 6 swap ~>
7 8 9 pop ~>